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The union representing Cami Automotive’s striking workers wants to go back to the bargaining table.

No talks are planned, but Unifor has decided to formally contact the company to return to negotiations with General Motors Canada after workers walked off the job in Ingersoll Sunday night.

“No formal contract negotiations have taken place, though each day there has been communication (text and telephone) between the parties,” the union said in a statement.

“We have found no common ground on the major issues at this time.”

Unifor Local 88 chair Mike Van Boekel, which represents the 2,800 striking autoworkers, met with national representatives to review the bargaining issues and discuss strategies.

The union is fighting for more money and job security and is asking for contract language that makes Cami the “lead plant” manufacturing the Chevrolet Equinox. It would mean the Ingersoll plant will always have one more shift working than the plant in Mexico that also assembles the crossover SUV.

“We will remain strong on the membership’s three major issues: job security, economics, and contract language,” union officials added.

A spokesperson for General Motors Canada said Wednesday the company had nothing further to add at this time and referred to the statement it released Sunday after talks broke down.

Workers took to the picket lines at the Ingersoll auto plant late Sunday – the first strike at the plant in 25 years. The strike has caught international attention as Unifor fights against the kind of jobs-to-Mexico threat that’s plagued large parts of the U.S.